Equipment

Investigating the Canon R5 Heat Emission

Published September 10, 2020
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ADDENDUM: I should have mentioned in the text, all testing was done at 73°F (22.75C) ambient temperature. 

Lots and lots of people are talking about Canon R5 heat cut-offs. The discussions range from technical discussions about heat generation, cooling methods, and firmware protocols to strident conspiracy theories.

I only know a little bit about heat:

  1. Electronics give off heat when they’re working.
  2. Heat fries chicken, which is good, and fries electronics, which is bad.
  3. You can get rid of heat by conduction (flowing through nearby materials), convection (circulating through gas or fluids), and radiation (which mostly occurs at high temperatures). We know from the teardown that the R5 is tightly sealed, so we have to figure that convection doesn’t play much of a role.

As a repair and QA oriented person, I hate bricking cameras. So I’m less interested in coaxing the camera into working hotter (see point 2) and more interested in how the heat gets out. When we did the teardown of the Canon R5, we saw some metal heat sink/transfer plates that would conduct heat away from specific chips, but once the heat sinks get hot, then what happens? That’s what I was interested in.

This is not rocket science; there are people far more qualified than me talking about chip operating temperatures, the thermal flow of various substances, firmware cool-down cycles, and stuff like that. (There are also people far less qualified than me talking about those things.) I have nothing to add to either of those discussions, and I don’t intend to get into a fracas about it.

This is just some fundamental stuff about how heat leaves the camera—because to my simple mind, getting the heat out of the camera is the end-all, be-all. Tweak heat flow as much as you like inside, and maybe you’ll gain a few minutes of this or that. But eventually, the heat has to get outside, or the camera needs to shut down. I do need to point out that the heat flow with the back off has nothing in common with the heat flow with the back on, so I’m doing this with fully assembled cameras.

First Step

We got a Canon R5 running V1.0 firmware, slapped a CFx card in, put it in 8K mode, and ran it to temperature cut-off, using some industrial thermometers to see where heat left the camera.

With the lens on, and the camera sitting on a table, all covers closed and LCD folded against the camera back but not on we ran it for 18 minutes before getting a temp warning. The hottest part of the camera was the back behind the LCD door (43°C / 109°F), followed by the rear body around the command/set dials and the area of the grip where you rest your thumb (40°C / 104°F). The bottom plate around the tripod socket reached 38°C / 100°F.

The top, front, and sides didn’t warm up much at all; most of the camera was around 30°C.

We redid things with the LCD moved to the open position, away from the camera. This time that area on the back of the camera was a bit cooler, 39.5°C / 103°F, but nothing else changed much. So a few takeaways: First, leaving the LCD open lets the camera radiate heat a bit better, which is pretty logical, but not better enough to prolong recording time. (We did use the same CFx card for both runs.)

Next, we waited until the camera cooled enough to record again and restarted. The only interesting part of this was the second shut down occurred at a degree or two lower external temps than the first. Is this because of the delay in getting residual heat out of the insides? The inside should be hotter than the outside, because thermodynamics, but I couldn’t measure how significant that difference was.

At this point, we decided that the thermometers we were using were reading from a 1cm² area, which was kind of a blunt tool. So I got a little FLIR IR camera, spent some time checking it’s readings against both of the thermometers we used, and decided it was just as accurate and gave us a lot more information. Plus, cool pictures that are more fun to look at than rows of tables.

The Chassis and Shell

The chassis and shell of most cameras have been developed for years to be strong and light (most manufacturers use similar material). I’ve never thought they conducted heat well, but I didn’t know for sure.

So we took a shell off to test this a bit. Just simple stuff; I used a narrow-gauge heat gun to heat the shell and see what happened.

First, we heated the inside of the shell with rubber intact and tested the temperature on the other side. We found that the shell is indeed not a great heat conductor. Heating the inside up to 180° F / 82°C the outside got up to 160° F, but with several seconds delay. With the rubber grip applied the difference was, as you would expect, a bit longer, and the outside reached about 150°.

Then we heated one corner of the shell looked to see how far the heat spread. We knew heat crossed the 2mm thickness of the shell slowly, so I figured it wouldn’t conduct heat to other parts of the shell very well. For once, I figured right.

We had to go back to our industrial thermometers for readings here; the spectrum was more than our little camera could handle. But I’ve got that bottom corner heated up to 180° F, the rest of the shell isn’t very hot at all.

Lensrentals.com, 2020

 

I kept the corner hot for a few minutes, and we did get some local spread, but I’m not sure if some of that was leakage from my heat gun. It’s very clear, though, that the shell material doesn’t spread heat especially well. If this was aluminum or copper, the whole shell would have heated up. Obviously, it does pass heat out of the camera to some degree, but it sure doesn’t act as a heat sink or anything.

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One other point of interest, the shell held heat pretty well. Even exposed to air, it was over 10 minutes before it cooled down to room temperature. This kind of poses the question that if heat isn’t getting out of the shell very well, then how does the heat get out?

Looking at the Heat

We got another Canon R5 with firmware v1.0, put a CFx card in, opened up the LCD, and started recording 8k again. Within a few minutes, we found our warm spot on the back of the camera.

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I overlaid an image from our teardown on the thermal image to show what’s right below there. Duh, the area over the processor and SDRAM cards.

Lensrentals.com, 2020  Please note, because someone is going to claim otherwise: this is NOT an image with the back off. It’s an image of inside of the camera overlaid on the heat image to correlate location. 

There was a little warmth on the front.

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The top remained relatively cool. I had wondered, with the camera sitting on its base, if there might be some ‘heat rising in air’ effect. But then, as the teardown showed, there’s not a lot of air in there. We seem to be seeing a ‘viewfinder blocks heat transfer’ effect.

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The bottom of the camera got a bit warmer, so it seems like the heat sink that’s connected to the metal tripod plate is sending some heat that way.

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After a while, the warm fuzzies started giving way to the screaming heaties. Here are some pics showing how the camera was lighting up as we approached thermal cut-off, at 20 minutes.

The bottom is my favorite in this group. Notice how every screw that goes into the metal tripod plate is lighting up. The lens mount ring is pretty hot, too, with a temp of 38°C. The tripod socket seems to actually be a bit cooler than the rest of the bottom plate. I’m not sure why, perhaps a different metal, a gasket where it connects to the tripod plate, or possibly because it sits in a little air pocket inside the camera.

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The top assembly still isn’t very hot in general, but both of the metal camera-strap lugs are spewing heat.

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The hot spot at the back peaks out at 42°C and the entire back warms up to some degree.

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We have some significant heat radiating from the front, too, particularly around the lens mount area and in the corner above the card doors.

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The hottest spot in the camera, though, was clearly the CFx slot. After the card was ejected it was about 48°C.

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After Firmware Upgrade

We got a longer run after upgrading to V1.1, getting 25 minutes before cut off, but at the expense of slightly higher temps. (Full disclosure: I didn’t tell Joey to use the same CFx card in every run, so that may have changed.)

Not surprisingly, the longer run times came with slightly higher temperatures. Only a half degree hotter at the back.

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And at the bottom.

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The card slot is quite a bit hotter, though.

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Of course, the card was hot, but I figured someone was going to ask, so here. It reads cooler than the slot, but it took a couple of seconds to get it out and get the image, so I’m not sure if it actually was.

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This made me curious about how hot the I/O ports were. The port covers had remained closed during recording. The ones on the mainboard were quite hot; those on the sub-board not hot at all.

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The sensor radiated quite a bit of heat, too. It wasn’t as hot as the card slot, but has a bigger surface area. It may also be that the metal in the IBIS unit is hot and that’s leaking out through the sensor area.

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A friend, who wants no part of the inevitable arguments a Canon R5 heat post causes these days and will therefore remain nameless, was kind enough to read the internal temperature from a raw file taken when we were doing these other measurements. The EXIF recorded internal temperature was 63°C (I originally typoed this as 61C, it has since been corrected), which is hotter than even the CFx card slot.

I don’t know which temperature sensor the EXIF reads or where it is located. But somewhere inside the camera is hotter than the CFx card, and way hotter than the outside of the camera. There has to be a gradient, of course, for heat to flow. Still, this seems to indicate heat isn’t flowing easily.

So What Did We Learn Today?

Odds and ends mostly. The answer to the question “how does heat leave the camera” is basically not very well, and mostly via the metal parts. ‘Mostly’ as in the temperature is higher there, so I assume the heat flows easiest to those metal parts. I don’t have the math to figure out the actual caloric transfer, and the ‘not metal’ parts have a bigger surface area, so it may be that most of the calories may exit through the shell. The camera is hotter deep inside (the temperature sensor) than at the hottest exit points.

I am NOT a chip guy, but according to their faq, the Toshiba voltage converting chips have a suggested maximum operating temp of 60°C before they dramatically lose efficiency, and less efficiency means generating more heat. The CFx card slot was at 57°C and the internal temperature sensor at 61° C when things shut down. That could be a coincidence but may suggest Canon doesn’t think getting the inside much over 60° C is a good idea. I don’t know, but I’m a conservative guy by nature, so my personal decision is I’d prefer not to get the inside much hotter than that.

I’m not going to comment on how to improve heat transfer deep inside the camera; other people seem to be working on that. But the camera is a lot hotter inside than it is outside when it shuts down. If it doesn’t get heat out very well, it certainly can’t be expected to cool down quickly after it turns off from overheating. Cooling the outside of the camera should help a bit, but it’s not going to be very efficient.

Leaving the LCD opened away from the camera back, opening up the HDMI port cover, and saving to SD cards when possible (not an answer for 8K video, I get that) may all help get heat out of the camera while you’re using it. Still, I doubt it’s enough to make a significant difference in recording time. Removing the rubber grips might help a bit, too, but probably not a lot; the shell isn’t a great heat conductor.

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It seems likely that taking off the lens and opening the shutter, opening the card doors, and removing the CFx card will speed cool down. (I think several people have already discussed that online). But that’s all I can think of that might help a stock camera stay cool, and none of those are impressive thoughts.

Some people intend to do more aggressive things to extend recording time.  It would certainly be possible, with some minor modifications, to connect the metal heat sink plates to the outside world. You might do so by just exposing the bottom tripod plate and attaching a sink to that. Of course you lose weather sealing, but it would be simple to try. I don’t know enough about the effectiveness of thermal transfer to say, but you could run thermal tape under all the bottom screws and bring it out through the bottom plastic cover and attach it to a heat sink. If that’s effective, adding some more paths to the two other heat plates in the camera might be even better.

You could also ventilate the camera to outside air fairly easily. There’s a large area in the body’s back plate that could be opened up; there’s no electronics under it.  There are some smaller areas on the front plate where this could be done, too. It would be a fairly simple matter to take all the weather sealing out and make some leaking places for air to circulate. I honestly doubt some air circulation is going to have much of a cooling effect, but again, I don’t have this kind of maths. I bet some of the commenters will, though.

There’s also the issue that the camera is hotter deep inside. I suspect that when some third party does good work to improve heat transfer (where there is demand, an entrepreneur will fulfill it), that work will have to include some modifications of the internal heat flow. That won’t of itself be enough; you’ll still have to get the heat outside of the camera to accomplish much.

These kinds of things would make for a bigger, bulkier camera with no weather sealing—sort of a redneck 8K video camera.

Given the low price of the R5 compared to a dedicated video camera with these specs, I expect someone will probably do it. Not me, I’m out of the entrepreneur thing, and a lot of experimenting (AKA camera sacrifice) would need to be done to figure out the most efficient methods.

I just can’t imagine tossing a fan on it and / or making a few holes is going to be effective. Someone will Kickstarter the idea, of course, but that doesn’t mean it’s going to work. Someone is raising a bunch of money on Kickstarter and then not delivering a working product. Who would have thought that could happen.

And Now, We Shall Have the Speculations!

Speculation is not knowledge.  Robert M. Price

For a long, long time, the engineers making photo cameras have been worried about better weather sealing and materials that are strong and lightweight. They have not been particularly worried about getting heat out of cameras.

A big camera has many different development teams, each doing its own thing when it designs a camera. Let’s guess that the team doing electronic and video capabilities managed to cram all this super video goodness onto chips. Surely the marketing team LOVED the idea.

Some other team probably said, ‘it’s gonna be hot in there’ and got told, ‘put in some heat sinks and transfers and do the best you can.’ That was done, we’ve seen it. Perhaps it could have been done better, but there was a lot of new stuff going into this camera, which probably meant a lot of compromises had to be made, and deadlines had to be met. (Actually, deadlines were missed, they always are, and the pressure mounted.) In the end, I bet that everyone agreed 15-20 minutes of 8k video was better than 0 minutes, and well, deadlines!

The body design team has been working towards the goal of light, strong, weather-resistant for about 15 years. A new casing material, openings to allow air (and therefore water) to flow through the camera, external heat sinks, that stuff wasn’t going to happen. Not only would you need to find new material, but you’d also need a new plant to make the parts and a redesigned assembly line, too. And nobody was going to hold up the release for another year while they redesigned things.

Is Canon going to “fix this” as people keep saying? I doubt that’s possible, and I really doubt Canon thinks it needs fixing. I believe they consider it primarily a photography camera that can shoot some video. There may be another tweak or two, but I speculate that operating temps have to be kept at some level, and that cool down is always going to be slow.

A firmware hack or update isn’t going to make the camera cool better; it’s going to allow it to work hotter. I think that probably isn’t a good idea, but I could be wrong. I’m wrong a lot. (Do you know what I do when I’m wrong? I say, “It looks like I was wrong about that.” Some of you all should try that. You’ll be surprised to find it’s not painful.)

Other people are certain this is a purposeful firmware crippling, and a hack will fix it. That will mean the camera can really operate at higher temperatures. It might be they are right. Things may work fine in there at 70°C or even 75°C (167° F).

Will the Canon R5ii someday have better heat management? It’s possible that Canon won’t give a damn since they consider this a photo camera with video capabilities, and it’s not a priority. I suspect, though, that Canon engineers are like me; they don’t like the idea of unescaped heat in a camera and will improve the heat flow on general principles. But that’s someday, and I’m living in today.

 

 

 

Joey Miller, Aaron Closz, and Roger Cicala

Lensrentals.com

This 11th day of the 9th year of 2020

 

A Note for Leaving Comments: We have polite discussions and disagreements here, backed by logic, facts, and, when possible, science. If you want to scream your viewpoints or make personal attacks on others, there are plenty of forums where that is the main method of communication; please take those comments there.

Another note for those about to suggest more tests: You can buy a nice little phone mounted IR camera for just a few hundred dollars. You should get one and do those tests. I’m like a squirrel, I have a short attention span and get bored easily. I’m over this heat stuff.

 

Author: Roger Cicala

I’m Roger and I am the founder of Lensrentals.com. Hailed as one of the optic nerds here, I enjoy shooting collimated light through 30X microscope objectives in my spare time. When I do take real pictures I like using something different: a Medium format, or Pentax K1, or a Sony RX1R.

Posted in Equipment
  • Finally someone takes some internal measurements of the R5 and talks about them with some sense instead of looking at a weather-sealed, no fan, compact design, 8K camera that reaches internal temps in the range of 140-150 degrees Fahrenheit and says “Why does it say it’s overheating?”.

  • asad137

    Not sure about Canon, but Linustechtips hacked together a water-cooled RED 8K camera. From the factory, it uses heat pipes coupled to finned heatsinks with forced air cooling.

  • Trey Mortensen
  • Roger Cicala

    LMAO!!!! Thank you, that made my day. 🙂

  • Roger Cicala

    I just know a little bit about chip operating temperature and such, so I’m probably going Dunning-Kreuger giving any response at all. But I think at 60° you’re seeing increased noise but I don’t think causing long term damage. Someone more kowledgeable please jump in here.

  • PeterParker

    I’m interested in knowing if the R6 has the same type of heat dissipation issue, and whether or not it shares the same type of “updated” sealing. One without the other would be an interesting circle to try to square.

    Thanks, as always, for these posts Joey/Aaron/Roger!

  • Roger Cicala

    It should, and probably does. But I’m not sure if that heat is all from the sensor, or maybe leaking around the edges from the metal arms in the IBIS? Or as Brandon Dube mentioned below, maybe not an accurate IR reading.

  • Roger Cicala

    Hank you have me thinking about years ago when I did a PhotoGeek contest. We should do a home-made cool down contest.

  • asad137

    “thermal” IR is a longer wavelength that we don’t really have any public data on the transmissivity of glass for

    At the longer end (into the THz/submm range) there are some data in the astronomical instrumentation literature, but almost certainly not for the huge variety of optical glasses that are commonly used in the visible/NIR. Tydex has some data on their website for things like Si, fused silica, quartz, and sapphire.

    Visible glasses are also all pretty universally terrible thermal conductors

    Except the crystalline ones, like crystalline quarts and sapphire. But even quartz goes opaque at around 3µm and only starts getting transparent again at around 40µm, Sapphire goes opaque around 5µm and opens up longwards of 100µm

    I’m not sure there is any material out there that has reasonable transmission from the visible all the way into the tens-of-microns wavelength range.

  • ProfHankD

    Well, I wouldn’t recommend it, but semiconductor parts generally can operate up to at least about 120C. Of course, I’m talking about max internal temp of the die; temp at the chip package surface is usually much lower than max temp on the die. There might well already be a spot on the die that’s at 120C with the readings you got. There’s also the old rule of thumb that semiconductor part life halves with every 5F temp increase….

    It looks like they’d have to do something really aggressive to cool within this package, but the fact that there seems to be a primary heat source (rather than many) helps. I don’t think your redneck cooler image is really too far off; you’d probably need either a thermoelectric (Peltier) cooler or a liquid or phase-change loop to move the heat out… but probably to a “cooling grip” rather than a fan and heat sink stuck on the back. There’s a really cheap and easy redneck solution in simply sticking a little sealed ice pack onto the back of the camera (duct tape + baggie)… the camera internals would probably stay hot enough to avoid condensation forming in the camera. Of course, I’d never do that; I’d 3D print a holder and clip-in ice pack. 😉

  • Wayne R Crauder

    Seeing the sensor gets that hot (maybe) does this affect the image quality comparing the last minute to the first minute? Probably would not show up downsized, but just curious about 8K quality.

  • Brandon Dube

    I wouldn’t use “not likely.” It depends how sensitive to NIR your camera is, and how how whatever can “see” the sensor is. If your IR camera is insensitive to NIR, and MWIR and LWIR ones generally are, then the hot mirror is not so relevant.

  • J.M. Stearns

    As a matter of fact, I am a 20D user. I’ve gotten my money’s worth of of this camera, and with a decent lens still takes better photos than my iPhone XS.

  • Patrick Giranthon

    Talking about video, I found absolute opposite ideas about sensor wearing. So at this point, I still dont know if using a sensor at 60° during a long period of time (25min sessions during years) is something harmful or not. I read many opinions, not many facts, and no studies at all… Any ideas about that??

  • Siegfried

    I was, uhm, less correct than I would like to have been
    (c) Aug 22, 2012

  • Adam Wilt

    Re. “This 11th day of the 9th year of 2020”, yes, it feels like the 9th year of 2020, but really, it’s just the 9th month. I think.

  • Athanasius Kirchner

    Thanks for all the testing and detailed analysis. It’s a great data set.

    The large discrepancy between the CFE slot (which has been denounced by some as the root of all evil) and the temperature registered in the EXIF is suspicious. So far, it appears that the temperature sensors inside the R5 aren’t very accurate. But at least it’s clear that the body shell is poor at transferring heat to the outside, and will definitely be the main roadblock in getting better performance out of the R5.

    It’s also clear that I dodged a bullet by not waiting for the R6. With its polycarbonate body shell, it’s obvious that that one will suffer even worse from thermal issues.

  • Jim A.

    This statement – “I’m wrong a lot. (Do you know what I do when I’m wrong? I say, “It looks like I was wrong about that.” Some of you all should try that. You’ll be surprised to find it’s not painful.)” is some solid advice. No pretense, just facts. It’s what makes these blogs better than any others I’m aware of. Your basic rule is a good one to live by. Thanks for doing what I was curious enough to consider doing with my own R5. I have two of the Seek Thermal cameras that fit my cell phone and thought, “I could just run it and watch what happens.” Now I don’t have to do that. I am curious about how much of the heat gets contributed by the CMOS sensor, but I read Brandon Dube’s comment below and realize I won’t likely get an accurate reading off it with my IR thermometer. Plus, at this point, it’s just navel gazing, I’m not hoping to turn my R5 into a Red Cinema cam. As usual, you’re sharing great info that interests us a lot, even if we’re not going to do anything with the info. Always learn, it’s something I keep trying to do.

  • Andreas Werle

    Thanks for that, Roger and Aaron (and Joey).
    Will you again break open a R5 and do the heat stuff investigation on a “naked” camera? 🙂
    Greetings Andy

  • “upgrade every 5-6 years rather than 15-16)” Seriously???

    Are You using a Canon 20D or a Nikon D100 in 2020?

  • obican

    Should’ve used dummy CF and SD cards to store all the heat and eject them when they get too hot, replace them with chilled ones. You get to use your extra card slots, you cool the camera down without compromising weather sealing and most importantly, Canon would get to sell a lot of accessories.

  • Brandon Dube

    Power consumption of a image sensor is usually between 2 and 8 watts, which must be dissipated through its package or actively cooled.

    Something like a phantom sensor is much higher — some break 50W, if you can believe it.

  • Brandon Dube

    On the viewfinder, I wouldn’t be so sure. Lots of visible light glasses are very opaque in mid and long wave IR, the spectral range where the FLIR camera is looking. “thermal” IR is a longer wavelength that we don’t really have any public data on the transmissivity of glass for. Visible glasses are also all pretty universally terrible thermal conductors.

    The same applies to the camera lens, although the plastic and metal that are wrapped around the glass should transfer heat fine. Maybe the cold you see in the FLIR there is real.

    When you look directly at the sensor, I don’t know whether the FLIR is getting spoofed or not, either. The hot mirror on the sensor is really reflective, but only in NIR — the heat from behind you might be part of the reading, not just the emissivity of the sensor. If the FLIR is sensitive in NIR, then it’s being spoofed. A smart thermal engineer could estimate what amount of ambient radiation is going to be hitting it and how far off accurate it might be. I am not that smart thermal engineer.

  • Roger Cicala

    I haven’t noticed heat pipes, but they have sinks, fans, and open ductwork.

  • Charles Simonds

    It would be interesting (to me at least) to know what thermal tricks Canon uses in their dedicated video cameras. I would expect the video cameras have been up against thermal limits for several generations. For example does
    Canon use heat pipes to remove heat from selected components in the video cameras.

  • rbruns

    Yes, I am over the heat stuff also and using the camera within its limitations. IMHO, one would have to be willing to sacrifice the camera if attempting to bypass the Canon safetys with a hack. Maybe a follow-on camera will have fewer limitations, but maybe not as newer electronics are again pushed to their thermal limits. Thanks for your thoughtful testing.

  • Chik Sum

    As a computer and camera geek for a decade and more, I agree that it’s a compromise, and that’s exactly I think that MILC won’t be the final answer like the iphone taking over point and shoot cameras… camera bodies going even lighter just sacrifices weight balance with lens, shrinking lenses and you loose IQ or aperture.

    While heat generates a lot more when taking 8K video which is just similar to keeping a car engine in redline or a computer CPU full load, which generates this shutting down heat issue, using the sensor as the VF all the time likely degrades the lifespan of cameras more (good for canon and other makers, as you are forced to upgrade every 5-6 years rather than 15-16). As consumers spending some USD 3500+ per 5 year don’t sounds like a good idea

  • Roger Cicala

    I used both an IR and contact to get standards. The IR was adjustable for emissity and I confirmed we had it right with the contact one. Then both agreed with the IR camera (somewhat to my surprise because of what you mentioned).

    I don’t have any knowledge about the EXIF temp indicator other than it’s in EXIF. I’m told, but don’t know for sure that there are 3 temp sensors inside. I don’t know where they are located, or what they report to EXIF; whether it shows the hottest, the average, or just one of them.

    Someone has suggested disassembling, leaving several heat probes inside, and reassembling but that’s more work than I’m willing to do, plus I don’t have that kind of equipment.

  • Ph?m Anh

    Hi Roger, it’s nice to see a Lensrental’s article about this topic. It certainly clear a lot of doubt. Could I confirm two things with you?
    1. The “industrial thermometer” is a contact type? I guess so since it use 1 cm2 surface to measure.
    2. From your measurements, is the EXIF temp a good indicator for internal temp? And it does have relation with the outside temp which we measure?
    Question No.1 is because a thermoengineer in FredMirand said the IR emissity of an object might affect the measured value to be different than actual value. A contact theometer is needed to confirm for an IR one.
    Question No.2 is because if we could use the EXIF temp as an indicator for internal temp then we could reset the overheating timer manually when we know the internal is cool enough.

  • ausidog

    As an engineer, my manager had a lot of old engineering adages. Here’s one that fits: “There comes a time in every project where you have to shoot the engineer and build the damn thing.”

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